Unidentified network Windows 8 Pro

Hello

I have a Windows 8 Pro 64 bit computer bit and it said that my wifi internet connection is "not identified-no network access.
I have a WiFi hotspot and it works on the PC of my father and my Android tablet. (by the way, the hotspot is a public network with a p/sem.)
I tried:

Restart the PC and the router,

Windows Troubleshooting (poster "WiFi is not a valid IP configuration")

Have turned off Windows Firewall (witch worked for 10 minutes) and I uninstalled Quicktime & Hello,.

I have no strange services that run in the background in taskmanager

Unchecked TCP/IPv6

Turn off/on WiFi adapter

Uninstall the driver for the WiFi card.

Deleted ROUTE 0.0.0.0

'Forget' the network

Re-installation of IPv4 & Ipv6

I ran as administrator of these commands

Restore the default install WINSOCK entries: netsh winsock reset catalog

Reset the battery TCP/IP IPv4 default installation. netsh int ipv4 reset reset.log

Reset the battery TCP/IP IPv6 default installation. netsh int ipv6 reset reset.log

netsh int ip reset C:\netsh.log.txt
netsh winsock reset

All do not work. I noticed a strange thing. In the properties of the wireless adapter TCP/IPv6 & TCP/Ipv4 have "Uninstall" whited.

I tried to reinstall them but that has not worked.

The last program that I installed is Adobe Download Assistant (I uninstalled, did not work)

And the last update of Windows installed is a "critical update for Windows 8. But he did not set a restore point before installation.

Any help would be appreciated.

Josh

PS: I contacted my internet provider and they said: 'this isn't our fault, contact the manufacturer of your PC. I did, but he couldn't understand our either.

Josh,

There is an APIPA address assigned automatically to the adapter wireless and as a result of which you cannot join any network or Internet access.

APIPA - an automatic private IP addressing

Addressing IP private AUTO is a DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration protocol) failover mechanism for local area networks. With AUTOMATIC private IP addressing, DHCP clients can obtain IP addresses, when the DHCP servers are non-functional. AUTOMATIC private IP addressing is in all modern versions of Windows.

When the failure of a DHCP, APIPA server allocates IP addresses in the private range 169.254.0.1 to 169.254.255.254. Customers ensure that their address is unique on the network using ARP (Address resolution Protocol). When the DHCP server is again capable of service requests, clients automatically update their addresses.

APIPA, all devices using the default netmask 255.255.0.0 and all reside on the same

I would have you try these commands once more.

netsh int ip reset resetlog.txt
netsh winsock reset
ipconfig/registerdns
ipconfig/flushdns
ipconfig/release

Restart the computer, and then check if you are able to connect to the network.

If the problem persists, manually assign an IP address to the wireless network and then try to ping the router to check if there is a good connection.

-Press the Windows key and the R key and then type NCPA. CPL

-Right click on the wireless network you are using, and then select Properties.

-Highlight or select version 4 Internet Protocol and click Properties.

-Select the option use the following IP address.

If the IP address of the router is 192.168.1.1, and the other the computer IP address is in the same sequence 192.168.1.2, then try to assign 192.168.1.3 and mass subnet 255.255.255.0 and press ENTER.

-Close the network properties window.

-Open the command prompt and type ping 127.0.0.1 and press ENTER.

-Type ping 192.168.1.1 and press on enter

-Type ping 192.168.1.3 and press to enter.

Let us know if the packets sent are equal to the packets received.

Post a screenshot after doing so.

Tags: Windows

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